Difference between revisions of "Whitehead2009"

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|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|Author(s)=Kevin A. Whitehead; Gene H. Lerner
 
|Author(s)=Kevin A. Whitehead; Gene H. Lerner
|Title=When Are Persons "White"?: On Some Practical Asymmetries of Racial Reference in Talk-in-Interaction
+
|Title=When are persons 'white'?: on some practical asymmetries of racial reference in talk-in-interaction
|Tag(s)=EMCA; conversation analysis; membership categorization devices; race; racial categories; whiteness;
+
|Tag(s)=EMCA; conversation analysis; membership categorization devices; race; racial categories; whiteness; Racism
 
|Key=Whitehead2009
 
|Key=Whitehead2009
 
|Year=2009
 
|Year=2009
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|Number=5
 
|Number=5
 
|Pages=613–641
 
|Pages=613–641
|URL=http://das.sagepub.com/content/20/5/613
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|URL=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0957926509106413
 
|DOI=10.1177/0957926509106413
 
|DOI=10.1177/0957926509106413
 
|Abstract=This report contributes to the study of racial discourse by examining some of the practical asymmetries that obtain between different categories of racial membership as they are actually employed in talk-in-interaction. In particular, we identify three interactional environments in which the ordinarily ‘invisible’ racial category ‘white’ is employed overtly, and we describe the mechanisms through which this can occur. These mechanisms include: (1) ‘white’ surfacing ‘just in time’ as an account for action; (2) the occurrence of referential ambiguities with respect to race occasioning repairs that result in overt references to ‘white’; and (3) the operation of a recipient design consideration that we term ‘descriptive adequacy’. These findings demonstrate some ways in which the mundane invisibility of whiteness — or indeed, other locally invisible racial categories — can be both exposed and disturbed as a result of ordinary interactional processes, revealing the importance of the generic machinery of talk-in-interaction for understanding both the reproduction of and resistance to the racial dynamics of everyday life.
 
|Abstract=This report contributes to the study of racial discourse by examining some of the practical asymmetries that obtain between different categories of racial membership as they are actually employed in talk-in-interaction. In particular, we identify three interactional environments in which the ordinarily ‘invisible’ racial category ‘white’ is employed overtly, and we describe the mechanisms through which this can occur. These mechanisms include: (1) ‘white’ surfacing ‘just in time’ as an account for action; (2) the occurrence of referential ambiguities with respect to race occasioning repairs that result in overt references to ‘white’; and (3) the operation of a recipient design consideration that we term ‘descriptive adequacy’. These findings demonstrate some ways in which the mundane invisibility of whiteness — or indeed, other locally invisible racial categories — can be both exposed and disturbed as a result of ordinary interactional processes, revealing the importance of the generic machinery of talk-in-interaction for understanding both the reproduction of and resistance to the racial dynamics of everyday life.
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 07:48, 11 June 2020

Whitehead2009
BibType ARTICLE
Key Whitehead2009
Author(s) Kevin A. Whitehead, Gene H. Lerner
Title When are persons 'white'?: on some practical asymmetries of racial reference in talk-in-interaction
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, conversation analysis, membership categorization devices, race, racial categories, whiteness, Racism
Publisher
Year 2009
Language English
City
Month
Journal Discourse & Society
Volume 20
Number 5
Pages 613–641
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/0957926509106413
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

This report contributes to the study of racial discourse by examining some of the practical asymmetries that obtain between different categories of racial membership as they are actually employed in talk-in-interaction. In particular, we identify three interactional environments in which the ordinarily ‘invisible’ racial category ‘white’ is employed overtly, and we describe the mechanisms through which this can occur. These mechanisms include: (1) ‘white’ surfacing ‘just in time’ as an account for action; (2) the occurrence of referential ambiguities with respect to race occasioning repairs that result in overt references to ‘white’; and (3) the operation of a recipient design consideration that we term ‘descriptive adequacy’. These findings demonstrate some ways in which the mundane invisibility of whiteness — or indeed, other locally invisible racial categories — can be both exposed and disturbed as a result of ordinary interactional processes, revealing the importance of the generic machinery of talk-in-interaction for understanding both the reproduction of and resistance to the racial dynamics of everyday life.

Notes